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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 382.95-0.8%Nov 13 4:00 PM EST

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To: Snowshoe who wrote (171556)8/20/2021 9:15:16 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

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Feel very fortunate about doing the Q3 Message 33319297 when I did.

Audi, joining Toyota, going unobtainium.

I think chip shortage is suspicious, as is the vaxx stuff. Shall investigate. There is something, I am guessing, that MSM is not telling us about chip shortage.

Just guessing at this stage.

bloomberg.com

Volkswagen Cuts Output at Biggest Plant as Chip Shortage Bites
Elisabeth Behrmann
August 20, 2021, 6:40 PM GMT+8
Volkswagen AG plants are set for a bumpy restart after the traditional summer break as the car industry remains in the grip of a chip shortage that most recently engulfed holdout Toyota Motor Corp.

VW’s Wolfsburg plant, the world’s biggest employing some 60,000 people, will restart with only one shift next week Monday through Friday, Europe’s biggest automaker said. Audi, the group’s biggest profit contributor, will extend the summer break by one week at its two factories in Germany as semiconductor supply remains “volatile and tense.”

Carmakers’ recent warnings of rocky months ahead are proving prescient after Covid-19 outbreaks in Southeast Asia forced restrictions at chip-processing plants. VW last month flagged “really constrained” output during the third quarter, while BMW AG predicted ongoing uncertainty.

Toyota will suspend output at 14 plants across Japan for various lengths of time through next month, succumbing to supply issues it had been navigating better than other manufacturers thanks to stockpiles of chips and other key components. The impact will be most severe in September, with Toyota slashing its production plan by 40%.

Read More: Toyota Cuts Show Covid Ravaging Even Best Supply Planners

While carmakers have been forced to dial back sales expectations, higher vehicle prices and a focus on major money makers have helped cushion the blow.

According to research by Susquehanna Financial Group, the amount of time it’s taking for chip-starved companies to get orders filled has stretched to more than 20 weeks, indicating the shortages are getting worse.

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